clutched her leather tighter around her as she continued down the darkening streets of Silver Creek-small mountain town, home to
lf off upstairs in the cozy apartment above the bookstore from anything remotely smelling of romance or adv
ht it was ominous as it echoed through the deserted street. Emma had been working late at the lo
an attempt to shrug off this watched feeling. Her fingers fumbled with
hand reached past her and scooped them up in one easy motion.
here
was longer now than it had been five years ago, falling in waves that now brushed his collar. His jaw was s
amber-brown eyes cut through e
the way down her spine. He held the keys out toward her, but when she reached fo
er when her chest rioted with so many warring
orner of his mouth. "News t
ize." Finally, Emma reached for her keys and clasp
suddenly tempered, overridden by something much
k', especially from the man who'd left town without saying good-bye five years ago; the man who'd been her best fri
. Whatever it is
his body stirred her memory of what it felt like to lean against him, like standing too close to a fire-
ked toward the source of that sound, and for one moment-a fra
hread of command in his voice that
ma's shaking fingers moved to the door lock. The next instant, Lucas was crowding the
pine and leather and something wild she couldn't quite place. She flicked on the lights and watched as warm go
is eyes roving over the shop
her chest. "You come back after five years and say we
hair, the gesture so autom
he Alp
ha. Leader of the Silver Creek pack." He watched her, expectant, a
ghing just a fraction hysteric
es, Emma. I'm talking about werewolves. You're in danger." Her laughter caught in her thr
was a werewolf. An Alpha werewolf. And he was telling her, "You are in jeopardy.". "I," she began to say, but the tinkle of breaking glass drowned her out. Lucas was moving before she even saw it, inserting himself between her and the front window a second before something huge and dark burst through it. Books exploded off the shelf, and glass rained down around them as Emma let out a scream. Lucas tensed, a low rumble rising up from his chest that was less than human. "Stay behind me," he ordered and his voice was lower, huskier now. "Whatever happens, stay behind me." Dust did not stir-or, at least, it did not seem to do so-as Emma peered around